Here is the link. Here a few pearls of Buffet wisdom from the letter:
Mr. Buffett, the chairman of Berkshire Hathaway Inc., said he was finding it difficult to identify undervalued investments to add to Berkshire’s portfolio. Mr. Buffett suggested both stocks and bonds are overvalued, and he expressed regret about not dumping some of his holdings several years ago when the market peaked. “I made a big mistake not selling several of our large holdings during The Great Bubble.”
“Overall, we are certain Berkshire’s performance in the future will fall far short of what it has been in the past,” wrote Mr. Buffett. “Nonetheless, [Vice Chairman Charlie Munger] and I remain hopeful that we can deliver results that are modestly above average.”
Mr. Buffett criticized both excessive pay packages for corporate executives and compensation committees for not paying enough attention to the interests of shareholders. According to Mr. Buffett, directors of public companies and mutual funds need to have their interests aligned with rank-and-file shareholders “in a big way.” He pointed out that all 11 directors at Berkshire are required to hold substantial amounts of the company’s stock to keep their own financial interests consistent with with those of shareholders. Each of the directors purchased their stock in the open market because Mr. Buffett does not allow Berkshire to grant stock options or any other incentive-based compensation.
“The bottom line for our directors: You win, they win big; you lose, they lose big. We know of no better way to engender true independence,” Mr. Buffett observed. However, Mr. Buffett admitted that the Berkshire approach does not always work, even conceding that he has sat on boards of companies in which Berkshire had invested and has “remained silent as questionable proposals were rubber-stamped” by the boards.
Finally, Mr. Buffett used his letter to accuse the Bush administration of pursuing tax cuts that favor large corporations and wealthy individuals. “If class warfare is being waged in America, my class is clearly winning,” he observed. Mr. Buffett also pointed out that too few corporations and corporate executives were paying close to the 35% federal tax rate they should be. Aside from 1983, Mr. Buffett observed that the percentage of federal receipts from corporate income taxes last year was the lowest since data was first published in 1934. Mr. Buffett went on to contend that Berkshire pays its taxes and is almost certainly among the country’s top 10 taxpayers, paying $3.3 billion in 2003 income taxes, 2.5% of the total 2003 U.S. corporate income tax.